LEGO® Indiana Jones™ 2: The Adventure Continues

LEGO® Indy is back in his biggest adventure yet. Battle through all four movies, including all-new levels from the original adventures and your favorite new moments from The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull... or in true LEGO® fashion, get creative and build your own levels to play with friends!

This guide covers a complete walkthrough for the game. It covers all story, treasure, bonus, and super bonus levels for the six main playsets, as well as outlines what is required to achieve 100% in the creator hub. It also covers exploration of the island...

In Doomtown once I get into the attic I can't jump high enough off the box to reach the rope. I've watched videos on youtube and people seem to reach it easily but I've tried so many times and he just wont reach. Please help, what am I doing wrong?!

After the smash hit of LEGO Indiana Jones: The Original Adventures and the then upcoming release of Kingdom of the Crystal Skull came Lego Indiana Jones 2: The Adventure Continues:

Lego Indiana Jones 2 follows the stories of Raiders of the Lost Ark, Temple of Doom, The Last Crusade, and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (which is the main focus), as you solve puzzles, break baddies, and build your way to victory. Although the game does redo some key levels from the first game, it mostly brings in scenes that weren't in the first Lego Indy game. With the scenes that have been done before (Like the bar fight in Raiders), it gets a new spin and is a lot different from the previous level. Whilst playing this though, it is clear that the focus was on the Kingdom levels. The three original movies are split up into five separate levels, while Kingdom has three chapters, each containing 5 levels. You have to complete the first level of the Kingdom levels to unlock Raiders. (Once you beat one movie, another unlocks (Temple unlocks after level 5 of Raiders and so on)).

There are generally four types of levels you will encounter. 1: the 'normal' Indy 1 type levels. These ones take a little longer than the rest and usually have puzzles in them. The second type is the 'kill all enemies' levels. These are really simple and take the least amount of time. All you have to do is kill the enemies it wants you to kill and you call it a day. There are usually about 3 waves. It's simple, but fun. The third type is the vehicle levels. These require you to destroy the vehicles the level tells you to. It's pretty much like the kill all enemies levels, just in vehicles. The last one is the boss fight. At the end of each chapter (except for some of the Kingdom parts), you will encounter a boss. Each boss has a certain weakness to find, and can be a lot of fun. You'll find at least one of all of those 4 level types in a chapter.

In order to play the levels though, you've gotta have characters to control. The game, like all Lego games, includes a wide varity of characters to unlock. You'll see many familiar faces from the movies on your adventures. The main character, Indy, has a whip that allows you to whip objects down, swing across dangerous areas, and even drag people around. He, like all characters, can also pick up weapons, like grenades, pistols, machine guns, spears, and many more! Also, something cool to note: you can hold more than one weapon/object (torch/shovel/etc) at a time (in your inventory, that is), unlike the previous installment! It comes in handy. You can also aim where you want the whip to go and where you want the gun to hit. (Unlike in Indy 1) Other characters include wrench characters (like Mutt Williams), who can fix objects, book characters (like Henry Jones), who can translate puzzles, shovel characters (Sallah) who can dig stuff, and many more! Characters can be purchased in hub worlds.

Yes, I said hub worlds. Each level pack has a unique hub world and more or less open world. In these worlds, you can find collectable items, vehicles to buy, minifigures, and the levels. In order to get to the next level once completing one, you have to find it. This, among other features, makes this game unique in comparison to the previous Lego games. There's lots to mess around with in the hubs!

Besides all of this, there is also a hub where you can create your own levels and mess around with blocks! This is a lot of fun and provides countless hours of fun. This is also one of the few Lego games to do this. (We have Lego Worlds right now, but still). The game also had the fantastic John Williams soundtrack from the movies and local multiplayer.

Overall, this is a fantastic and unique Lego game! It's definitely one of the most underrated Lego games.